Aristotelian analysis of standard form categorical propositions: A, E, I,
and O propositions and the rules of distribution.

The Aristotelian square of the oppositions and the immediate inferences
involved.(Remember that inferences are best defined in terms of their
respective truth and falsity: contraries cannot both be true, but they can
both be false).

The other immediate inferences.

Venn diagrams for categorical propositions and standard form categorical
syllogisms.

The Rules and Fallacies of standard form categorical syllogisms.

The common valid argument forms; disjunctive syllogism, pure and mixed
hypothetical syllogism (modus ponens and modus tullens are the two valid
forms).

Basic Symbolic Logic including:

Deriving the truth of a compound statement by applying the definitions of
conjunctions, disjunctions, and hypotheticals,

Showing the specific forms of arguments as conditional statements,

The use of truth tables to determine validity,

Mood and figure (you will be given the four figures)

DeMorgan's Theorems.

Informal fallacies: you will be given three fallacies and three examples
and asked to fit the definition to the fallacy. You will also be asked to
define three named informal fallacies.